Watch Out for
Fake
Family Trees
By James Pylant
COPYRIGHT © 2002, 2004 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
DO NOT POST OR PUBLISH WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION
Several years ago, upon our first visit to Salt Lake City's Family History Library, we found a
microfilmed copy of a genealogy of the Van Meters in New York. It traced the lineage
of this family back to Joost Jansen Van Meteren who married Sara DuBois. But it was the
DuBois bloodline that never seemed to end. It started with Sara's parents, French immigrants,
and continued backward, giving names of grandparents, great-grandparents, and so on. It concluded with the DuBois descent from the Plantagenet family.
In just an hour we started our search with a seventeenth century New York family and ended with a royal bloodline.
There was no documentation, but we wouldn't let it end there.
After returning from Salt Lake City, a search was started on the newly found DuBois line. It
did not take long to answer that question about documention for the royal bloodline. William
Heidgerd's The American Descendants of Chrétien
DuBois of Wicres, France, Part One (New Paltz, New
York: DuBois Family Association, 1968), gave the sobering news. The illustrious DuBois
lineage was widely published, but that didn't make it accurate. A French genealogist hired by
a DuBois descendant had, as Heidgerd wrote, "perpetrated upon her an outrageous fraud."
The French genealogist copied the lineage of a DuBois family of royal descent from a reliable
reference and then grafted the noble branch to the family tree of his client. The French
genealogist purposely combined the identities of Chrétien
DuBois and Chrétien
Maxmillan
DuBois des Fiennes. He then conveniently omitted dates of birth and death, for Chrétien DuBois was at least 120 years older than Chrétien Maxmillan DuBois des Fiennes! Heidgerd
credits the late Reverend W. Twyman Williams for exposing the fraud. Although the
Williams report was in 1935, many did not learn of it until the publication of Heidgerd's
volume more than 30 years later. Sadly, this is often the case with fraudulent genealogies.
They make their way into books which sit on library shelves waiting to deceive a new,
unsuspecting generation of genealogists.
Robert Charles Anderson's article, "We Wuz Robbed!," in the Genealogical Journal
of the Utah Genealogical Association, Vol. 19, Nos. 1 & 2 (1991), warns researchers
of the genealogical pitfalls created by the late Gustave Anjou. It's been nearly 60 years
since Anjou's death, yet his fraudulent pedigrees were incoporated into many published family
histories. For an overview of the Anjou fraud, see a report by America's First Families.
In National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 79, No. 2, editors Gary B. and
Elizabeth Shown Mills, on the subject of documentation, shared their experience with a well-known
genealogical compiler who did not cite his sources. "Several expensive years later, we
discovered that he disdained documentation: he had manufactured ancestors for us. As he
later explained, he 'liked to make people happy, and people don't like dead ends or dull
forebearers.' The Millses added, "This man's writings are still very much alive on library
shelves, as well as on genealogy's 'swap-out circuit.'"
In "Early Nichols Genealogy Exposed as Fraud," in American Genealogy Magazine, Vol.
12, No. 1, we wrote of George L. Nichols's experience with the research of an earlier researcher
named Leon Nelson Nichols. George L. Nichols concluded that the work of the earlier
researcher was purely fictional. "It's a shame that people think they have to invent glamorous
backgrounds for a family or families," he said, "but they do it."
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